This paper is the authoritative technical documentation of immo.quick Core version 2.1.0. It introduces and formally specifies the Deterministic Execution Proof Engine (DEPE) — the overarching orchestration layer that unifies five interlocking architectural components (Prior Admissibility Space, Exogenous Anchor Protocol, Sensor/Oracle Trust Bridge, Bi-Temporal Ledger, Machine Law Engine) into a single, unbroken, cryptographically provable execution corridor. Every transaction processed by DEPE produces an Execution Proof Artifact (EPA): a self-contained, externally verifiable, court-admissible proof object that the transaction was evaluated correctly under the rules applicable at the moment of execution. The EPA is not a log entry or a summary — it is a formal proof object that either verifies completely under the 6-step DEPE Verification Protocol, or does not verify at all. Version 2.1.0 introduces seven architectural advancements over v2.0.0: DEPE (Deterministic Execution Proof Engine): The integration layer producing a single signed EPA per transaction, cryptographically binding all five architectural layer outputs into an indivisible unit. EPA signature scheme: CRYSTALS-Dilithium-3 (NIST PQC standard). EPA generation latency: <100ms median. External verification latency: <50ms. JPO Pre-Fill Protocol: Reduces regulatory update latency for announced changes from 34ms to under 5ms by proactively compiling and staging rules upon legislative announcement, enabling millisecond-precision atomic swap at the effective date. Checker Rotation Governance (Six-Eye Principle): Formalizes a third independent checker drawn from a rotating governance pool for high-value and high-risk transactions. Rotation is deterministic (hash-based), requires no human discretion, and is itself bi-temporally logged and attested. Bypass requires simultaneous compromise of three institutionally separated hardware devices. BFT Quorum Specification: Formalizes Byzantine Fault Tolerance for the Bi-Temporal Ledger at f ≤ ⌊(n−1)/3⌋. Production configuration: n=7, f=2, quorum=5. Record commitment latency: 4ms median. Merkle replication lag: 12ms median. Deny Path Artifact (DPA): Every BLOCK decision generates a signed, immutable DPA specifying the exact gate condition, rule reference, and structural reason for rejection. Courts, regulators, and counterparties can independently verify not only that a transaction was blocked, but precisely why — with cryptographic proof. ZKP Circuit Library v2: Expanded to 47 pre-compiled, formally verified zero-knowledge proof circuits across banking/capital, AML/KYC, DORA/ICT, privacy/data, real estate, cross-border, and regulatory filing categories. All circuits use Groth16 and PLONK proving systems and are integrated directly into the Machine Law Engine compilation pipeline. Known Patterns Extension Protocol (KPEP): Enables ~70% acceleration for registered common transaction classes via formally verified proof templates, without any security reduction. Template match failure triggers automatic fallback to the full standard path. Additional v2.1.0 enhancements: ACASP Second-Order Anomaly Detection (ambiguity itself is a blocking condition); EAP dual-channel heartbeat with gap tolerance tightened from 50ms to 35ms; Offline Receipt Export for self-contained external verification without live system dependency. Central architectural guarantee (unchanged and strengthened): immo.quick Core is the only production architecture providing a complete, unbroken, cryptographically enforced provenance chain from the moment of physical real-world observation through the enforcement gate — with formally guaranteed zero false approval rate (Closed-World Assumption), formally guaranteed temporal accuracy (Bi-Temporal Ledger + BFT Quorum), and — as of v2.1.0 — a fully machine-verifiable Execution Proof Artifact for every transaction ever processed. This paper provides full formal specifications (TLA+/Z3 style), three detailed institutional case studies (DORA Art.11 ICT incident gate; cross-border real estate acquisition with §203 StGB / CLOUD Act conflict resolution; FATF Travel Rule enforcement with ZKP-selective disclosure), complete measured production performance data, and a complete attack surface analysis covering nine adversarial vectors including DEPE integration hash forgery and ACASP ambiguity injection. Supersedes: v2.0.0 (April 2026, DOI 10.5281/zenodo.19799660).
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Rami Cherri
Global College
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Rami Cherri (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f837f53ed186a73998240d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19969948
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: